Chicago News
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The proposed Michigan Avenue SSA would trace the Magnificent Mile from Oak Street to the Chicago River.
A failed 2020 proposal to prop up Chicago’s flagship retail district is set to be resurrected on Wednesday after winning over the local aldermen who effectively killed it last year.
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Lincoln Towing's impoundment lot in Uptown. A City Council committee is set on Wednesday to consider an ordinance related to towing storage lots. [The Daily Line/Alex Nitkin]
The City Council Committee on License and Consumer Protection is scheduled on Wednesday to consider a mayoral proposal related to towing lots, and members of the council’s budget committee are set to hear an update on this year’s spending to date.
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Megan Mathias, candidate for 45th Ward alderman, speaks to constituents as a few dozen residents gathered outside Ald. Jim Gardiner's (45) office Sept. 13, 2021, demanding that he resign amid recent scandals.
The proposed ward map unveiled last week by a City Council committee would draw out the only declared challenger to embattled Ald. Jim Gardiner (45).
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced up to $241 million in new subsidies for two dozen affordable housing proposals on Monday. [Alex Nitkin/The Daily Line]
Chicago will bankroll two dozen affordable housing developments this year spanning more than 2,000 new units, more than doubling its typical funding allotment — thanks in part to the new gush of new federal funding from the American Rescue Plan Act.
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A rendering shows the Cubs' plans for a two-story addition to the southeast corner of Wrigley Field that would house a sportsbook. [Cubs via Block Club Chicago]
An ordinance to legalize sports betting at five major Chicago venues is on track to advance out of a City Council committee on Tuesday after city officials added a last-minute provision designed to squeeze more money out of the city’s pro teams.
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Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi is set to go before aldermen to answer questions on commercial property tax assessments.
City officials are set Tuesday to update aldermen on the lending patterns of banks that hold city investments, and Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi will be in the hot seat as aldermen ask about commercial property tax assessments.
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The City Council Rules Committee released an online interactive version of its draft map on Thursday.
Chicago would get its first-ever majority-Asian American ward under a new draft map released on Wednesday. The future site of the Lincoln Yards mega-development would switch back to its previous alderman. And at least three ward boundaries would conveniently swerve around the homes of sitting aldermen’s political opponents.
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Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Iris Martinez speaking to reporters after giving her “State of the Clerk’s Office” address on Wednesday, the anniversary of her swearing-in. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Iris Martinez highlighted a rush of hew hiring reforms and the installation of a new in-office watchdog in a public address on Wednesday, saying she has “transformed” the office in the year since her controversial predecessor retired. She also hit back against critics who say her efforts at transparency fall short of what she promised.
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The City Council Committee on Special Events, Cultural Affairs and Recreation approved the nomination of Erin Harkey as the new head of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. Aldermen unanimously approved a measure to beef up city worker protections. The City Council Committee on Housing and Real Estate approved four ordinances related to city land transactions. And a follow-up report from the city’s Office of Inspector General found that public health officials are making progress on improving security around the COVID-19 contract tracing program.
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The Latino Caucus and its supporters signed paperwork Thursday to put their ward map proposal up for a referendum vote next year. [Justin Laurence/Block Club Chicago]
Saying “it’s time for the voters” to decide, City Council’s Latino Caucus and its supporters signed paperwork Thursday to put their ward map proposal up for a referendum vote next year.
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Ald. Ariel Reboyras (30) holds a copy of the rules committee ward map introduced on Wednesday. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Aldermen blew past a critical Wednesday deadline to approve new ward boundaries, all but foreclosing any possibility of a new Chicago ward map until 2022 as a key aldermen called on her colleagues to “start over.”
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Ald. Carrie Austin (34) speaks during a City Council meeting on Oct. 27, 2021. [Don Vincent/The Daily Line]
Ald. Carrie Austin (34), the City Council’s second-most senior aldermen and one of three sitting council members under federal indictment, will not run for reelection in 2023, she told The Daily Line on Wednesday. If she finishes her current term, she will have served 29 years in the body.
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Erin Harkey’s confirmation as commissioner of the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events [YouTube/Design Museum of Chicago]
Aldermen are set to confirm a new commissioner to oversee the city’s cultural programming, tighten city labor regulations and dispense with a series of real estate transactions during a trio of virtual committee meetings on Thursday.





















